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Logging and Log Interpretation - Sonic LoggingBy C. S. Matthews, M. Prats, R. I. Jewett, J. D. Baker
By mathematical analysis it was found that injectivity history of a uniform five-spot pattern can be calculated by rather simple formulas. These calculated injectivities were found to agree rather wel
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Producing – Equipment, Methods and Materials - Influence of Propping Sand Wettability on Producti...By C. S. Matthews, M. J. F. Rosenbaum
The purpose of thir work wax to lcarn it~lzut infori~lation could he obtained from various typs of pilot water floods and to attempt to find the optunum pilot patter11, for a revervoir which had previ
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X-ray Notes on the Iron-molybdenum and Iron-tungsten SystemsBy E. O. Chartkoff
IN 1926 one of the authors published researches on the determination and description of the iron-tungsten and iron-molybdenum systems,1 including the equilibrium diagrams. In 1929, further work was ca
Jan 1, 1930
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Papers - - Research - The Electrolytic Model and Its Application to the Study of Recovery Problems (T. P. 1945, Petr, Tech., Nov. 1945, with discussion)By Holbrook G. Botset
It is possible by means of the electrolytic model to simulate water-flooding or gas recycling systems involving input and output wells, and also the encroachment of a natural water drive. The results
Jan 1, 1946
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Papers - - Research - The Electrolytic Model and Its Application to the Study of Recovery Problems (T. P. 1945, Petr, Tech., Nov. 1945, with discussion)By Holbrook G. Botset
It is possible by means of the electrolytic model to simulate water-flooding or gas recycling systems involving input and output wells, and also the encroachment of a natural water drive. The results
Jan 1, 1946
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Reservoir Engineering- Laboratory Research - Some Aspects of Polymer FloodsBy N. Mungan, F. W. Smith, J. L. Thompson
Adsorption of polymers and transport, rheology and oil recovery efficiency of their solutions were studied in the laboratory to evaluate the use of polymers in waterflood-ing. While a tenfold mobil
Jan 1, 1967
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New York Paper - Ternary Systems of Lead-antimony and a Third Constituent (with Discussion)By E. H. Roberts, L. G. Swenson, F. C. Nix, R. A. Morgen
The binary system lead-antimony has been the subject of comprehensive investigations in these laboratories by Dean1 and his associates. The effect of a third constituent on this system, particularly o
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Chicago Paper - Chilean-mill Practice at the Portland Mill (with Discussion)By Luther W. Lennox
The purpose of this article is not to compare one type of grinding machinery with another and to conclude from a series of tests that one particular machine is superior to all others. Neither is the r
Jan 1, 1920
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Ore Microscopy And Genesis Of The Copper-Shale Deposit At Creta, OklahomaBy Delbert E. Gann, Richard D. Hagni
Ore microscopic study of copper-bearing shale at the Creta mine in southwestern Oklahoma reveals a variety of copper sulfide grains and shows that each has originated by replacement of original consti
Jan 1, 1985
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Heat And Sound InsulatorsBy J. E. Lamar, J. S. Machin
INSULATING materials include a wide variety of nonmetallic mineral products such as exfoliated vermiculite, expanded gypsum, 85 pct magnesia, diatomite, asbestos, perlite, cellular glass, pumice, sili
Jan 1, 1949
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Papers - Some Things We Don't Know about the Creep of Metals (T. P. 1087)By H. W. Gillett
Unlike most previous Howe lecturers, I had not the good fortune to be associated with Henry Marion Howe, nor to be directly one of his students. Yet, through his writings, he has been my teacher, as h
Jan 1, 1939
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Papers - Acceleration of the Rate of Corrosion by High Constant Stresses (Institute of Metals Division Lecture, T.P. 1204)By Jr. E. H. Dix.
In selecting the subject, "Acceleration of the Rate of Corrosion by High Constant Stresses,'' for the 1940 Institute of Metals Division Lecture, I have been influenced by its highly theoreti
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Acceleration of the Rate of Corrosion by High Constant Stresses (Institute of Metals Division Lecture, T.P. 1204)By Jr. E. H. Dix.
In selecting the subject, "Acceleration of the Rate of Corrosion by High Constant Stresses,'' for the 1940 Institute of Metals Division Lecture, I have been influenced by its highly theoreti
Jan 1, 1940
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Engineering Research - Dimensional-model Studies of Oil-field Behavior (T. P. 1413, with discussion)By M. C. Leverett, M. E. True, W. B. Lewis
This paper states the theory underlying the design of two kinds of dimensionally scaled models of parts of idealized oil fields. One of these simulates an oil well and its surrounding sand for a dista
Jan 1, 1942
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Engineering Research - Dimensional-model Studies of Oil-field Behavior (T. P. 1413, with discussion)By W. B. Lewis, M. E. True, M. C. Leverett
This paper states the theory underlying the design of two kinds of dimensionally scaled models of parts of idealized oil fields. One of these simulates an oil well and its surrounding sand for a dista
Jan 1, 1942
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The Malleability Of NickelBy Paul Merica
ALTHOUGH nickel was discovered and isolated as early as 1750 and its valuable properties recognized, many years passed before it was used commercially for wire, sheet, rods, etc., in the pure form. Th
Jan 1, 1925
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A Study of Differential FlotationBy C. R. Ince
THE term "differential flotation" is used to denote a flotation operation in which separation is effected between two or more minerals of the same class; e. g., lead sulfide from zinc sulfide, pyrite
Jan 1, 1929
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The Erosion of GunsBy Henry Howe
1. Introduction.-This paper is based in large part on the examination of two rings, shown in section in Fig. 4 to 15, cut from an eroded 14-in. (35.56-cm.) gun, liner, and containing, according to Boo
Jan 2, 1918
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Steam-Shovel Mining of Bituminous CoalBy H. H. Stoek
THE fundamental reasons underlying the choice of a method of mining a coal seam are safety of operation, cheapness of producing the product and the character of the product as a saleable article. Fro
Jan 9, 1917
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New York Paper - Luther, Körner, Humboldt, and SwedenborgBy R. W. Raymond
Four portraits have recently been hung in the rooms of the Institute, in recognition of four illustrious men with whom we, as mining engineers and metallurgists, may claim fellowship. Luther. Ma
Jan 1, 1909